Thirumeni Rathna Kavirayar

Summary

Tirumeni Rathna Kavirayar, known in full as Tirumeni Kaari Rathna Kavirayar, was a 16th-century Tamil scholar. He is known for his work Nunporul Maalai, a commentary on Parimelalhagar's commentary to the Kural text.[1] His work is also the first in the series of commentaries appearing on Parimelalhagar's Kural commentary, known in the scholarly circle as uraikku urai (commentaries to the Commentary).[2]

Works edit

Kavirayar's work on the Parimelalhagar commentary to the Kural text is considered one of the finest works on the subject. According to M. Shanmugam Pillai, Kavirayar titled his work Nunporul Maalai, which literally means “garland to the work of subtle meanings", because it elaborates on the finest interpretations found in Parimelalhagar's commentary on the Kural literature.[2] According to E. Sundaramurthy, former vice-chancellor of the Tamil University, the Nunporul Maalai lists divergent interpretations, who explains that such differences, if based on genuine academic grounds, are part of research methodology.[3]

Kavirayar has also authored similar work on the Tolkappiyam, which is titled Tolkappiya Nunporul Maalai. However, this work is completely lost now.[2]

Legacy edit

Kavirayar's work has inspired several scholars after him, each of whom wrote highly praised commentaries on Parimelalhagar's work worthy of critical analysis. These scholars include Saravanaperumal Iyer, Murugesa Mudaliyar, Ramanuja Kavirayar, K. Vadivelu Chettiar, Arasan Shanmuganar, Kuppuswamy Mudaliyar, and V. M. Gopalakrishnamachariyar.[2]

See also edit

Citations edit

References edit

  • R. Mohan and Nellai N. Sokkalingam (2011). உரை மரபுகள் [Conventions of Commentaries]. Chidambaram: Meiyappan Padhippagam.
  • G. P. Chellammal (2015). திருக்குறள் ஆய்வுக் கோவை [Tirukkural Research Compendium] (in Tamil) (1 ed.). Chennai: Manivasagar Padhippagam.
  • Vamanan (1 November 2021). "Returning to the classic commentary of Thirukkural". The Times of India. Chennai: The Times Group. Retrieved 1 November 2021.